The 70th Primetime Emmys are finished, with “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” and “Game of Thrones” taking home the big wins (you can read the full list here).

But the ceremony is a giant production, and TV viewers only get to see a glimpse of the whole shebang. Here are some moments that weren’t featured on TV that TheWrap witnessed firsthand at the Los Angeles ceremony.

1. Besides the Red Carpet, the place to be before the show is the lobby of the J.W. MarriottWhile most people were walking the red carpet on a very hot Los Angeles afternoon, the place to relax and cool off before the show was the lobby of the J.W. Marriott, next door to the Microsoft Theater. The room was packed with attendees hanging out in their fancy attire, swinging back drinks and standing in line to take pictures with a giant Emmy statue.

2. Tracy Morgan pays homage to Lucile Ball, Jackie Gleason… and craft servicesThough he didn’t win an award, Morgan was one of the presenters Monday night. During his brief remarks in front of the press, Morgan seemed genuinely happy to be there.

“You think about the people that have come through this community, through this institution. You go, wow, the people who have won it. You’re paying homage to them. The people no longer with us: Lucille Ball. Jackie Gleason. Incredible.”

He argued the Emmys are for everyone, not just the winners on the stage, but everyone involved with the shows.”It’s all for the unsung heroes: The grips, the craft services. For them.”

Morgan also had a funny back and forth with a reporter from Australia’s Network 10. When he said he “can’t wait to get back to Australia,” the reporter asked him if that meant he was planning on visiting the country. “Yea, I’m coming back with a snake. The most poisonous one I can find.”

3. Tiffany Haddish scolds the press room… but she gets itTiffany Haddish, who won for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy for her hosting stint on “Saturday Night Live” at the Creative Arts Emmys, took a lighthearted jab at the hard-working journalists (including yours truly) in the Emmy’s press room.

“This is really awkward for me, I’m not gonna lie. Nobody is paying attention, you’re all typing. This is rude. If we was at a comedy show right now, I would be cursing all of y’all. But it’s cool. I’m with you. I know you’re doing your jobs.”

4. Henry Winkler talks doing scenes with Bill Hader on “Barry”Winkler, who won the Emmy for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy, gave the press a bit of a behind-the-scenes at look at the filming of his HBO comedy “Barry” with Bill Hader. It seems like Hader has trouble balancing being a producer, writer and actor.

“He would write the script, he would mouth it with you. Even if he’s in your scene you would have to remind him, ‘We’re acting together, I can see your lips moving.’ He would say to me, ‘Henry, please just once say it the way I wrote it so we can hear it.’ My mind and my mouth are not always friends. So I said, ‘Bill, I am trying.'”

5. John Oliver reacts to “Game of Thrones” winning while at the press room micCovering the Emmys from the press room is an interesting experience because winners are answering questions while the show is still going. So while John Oliver was at the mic talking about another win for “Last Week Tonight,” his fellow HBO show “Game of Thrones” won for Outstanding Drama Series.

“‘Game of Thrones’ won? For what? Best drama? That’s great! It’s very good!” Way to be a company man, John.

6. Glenn Weiss’s proposal to Jan Svendsen had the press room swooningYou would be hard pressed to find anyone who had a better night than Glenn Weiss. Not only did he win for Outstanding Directing for a Variety Special, Weiss stunned everyone when he proposed to his girlfriend, Jan Svendsen on stage (getting a huge ovation from the press room in the process). Backstage, we witnessed Bill Hader (among many other winners) congratulating the two.

Weiss elaborated on his decision, including that only his father knew of his real intentions. “This was coming,” Weiss said of the engagement. “The timing just lined up really nicely.”

Hamish Hamilton, who was directing tonight’s show, was also competing with Weiss for the directing award. (Hamilton was up for NBC’s Super Bowl LII halftime show). Weiss said he thought about tipping off Hamilton so he could capture Svendsen’s reaction, but thought it would be in bad taste since they were competing against each other.

“I think we’re probably going to hit more parties than we probably were going to tonight,” Weiss ended with. Honestly, those two crazy kids deserve it.

10 Notable Emmy Hosting Teams: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (Photos)

Because they co-host the “Weekend Update” segment on “Saturday Night Live,” it makes perfect sense for Colin Jost and Michael Che to host the 70th Primetime Emmy Awards together on Sept. 17. But over the last 20 years, this will be only the third time the Emmys have used more than one host, even though two or more hosts were the norm in the show’s first half-century. Here are 10 other notable hosting teams, some that make perfect sense and some that don’t.

1952: Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz

Lucy and Desi were clearly the first couple of television in its early days, so it was natural that they’d be co-hosts only the fourth time the Emmys were handed out – a show on which their show “I Love Lucy” also won the top comedy award.

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1962: David Brinkley, Johnny Carson and Bob Newhart

Why three hosts? Because the 1962 show took place simultaneously in three locations: Los Angeles (Newhart), New York (Carson) and Washington, D.C. (Brinkley).

Getty/NBC Television

1968: Frank Sinatra and Dick Van Dyke

Sinatra handled the L.A. show, Van Dyke the N.Y. one, and they had one thing in common in 1968: They both barely survived a snafu-ridden Emmys show.

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1976: Mary Tyler Moore and John Denver

Mary Tyler Moore had been a TV icon for more than a decade, and the night she hosted in 1976 her show would win five top awards. So why saddle her with a country-pop singer who was criticized for saying “far out!” too much? Only the TV Academy knows.

Public Domain

1980: Steve Allen and Dick Clark

Allen famously hated rock ‘n’ roll; Clark popularized it on “American Bandstand.” But they were both TV icons, so that was good enough.

UPI/Public Domain

1983: Eddie Murphy and Joan Rivers

By the standards of the time, “Saturday Night Live” cast member Murphy and “Tonight Show” regular Rivers were pretty rude and transgressive comics – and they didn’t disappoint on Emmy night, delivering the bawdiest (and, some thought, most offensive) Emmys ever.

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1986: Shelley Long and David Letterman

Letterman was only in his third year as a late-night host, while Long was already on her fourth nomination for her role in “Cheers.” But the show was on NBC and they were two of the network’s biggest stars, so they became co-hosts.

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1990: Candice Bergen, Jay Leno and Jane Pauley

Bergen played a Pauley-like newswoman on “Murphy Brown,” and Leno was the change of pace in the middle of a three-hour show in which each of the hosts handled duties for an hour.

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1995: Jason Alexander and Cybill Shepherd

Alexander was in the sixth year of the comedy series “Seinfeld,” Shepherd in the first year of her series “Cybill.” One of those shows would go on to be iconic, and the other wouldn't.

“It sounded like a good idea,” Probst told TheWrap of the ill-fated plan to put the five nominees in the reality-host category in charge of the Emmys. “[We] were supposed to be the best hosts, and yet we did the worst hosting in the history of the Emmys.”

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From Lucy and Desi to those reality-show hosts, the Emmys have both soared and stumbled when enlisting more than one host

Because they co-host the “Weekend Update” segment on “Saturday Night Live,” it makes perfect sense for Colin Jost and Michael Che to host the 70th Primetime Emmy Awards together on Sept. 17. But over the last 20 years, this will be only the third time the Emmys have used more than one host, even though two or more hosts were the norm in the show’s first half-century. Here are 10 other notable hosting teams, some that make perfect sense and some that don’t.